- 1377 in Langland's
Piers Plowman "Fissch to lyue in þe flode..Þe
corlue by
kynde of þe eyre". In Europe, "curlew"
usually refers to one species, the Eurasian...
- further: And what say you to the game at chestes? It is
truely an
honest kynde of
enterteynmente and wittie,
quoth Syr Friderick. But me
think it hath...
-
Valentynes day Whan
every foul
cometh there to
chese his make Of
every kynde that men
thynke may And that so huge a
noyse gan they make That erthe, and...
-
learns about the
salvation of the
Emperor Trajan and the
power of love.
Kynde ('character,
natural disposition, nature', here
understood as an aspect...
-
priest John
Lydgate observed in Troy Book, "For
naturelly blod wil ay of
kynde / Draw unto blod, wher he may it fynde."
William Jenkyn referenced the proverb...
- tenderly.
Unkynde she
woulde not be unto no creature, ne
forgetful of ony
kyndeness or
servyce done to her before,
which is no
lytel part of
veray nobleness...
-
Volantynys day Whan
euery bryd
comyth there to
chese his make Of
euery kynde that men
thinke may And that so
heuge a
noyse gan they make That
erthe &...
-
Elizabeth (2007), "Albina, her sisters, and the
giants of Albion", The "
Kynde Bloode of Engeland":
Remaking Englishness in the
Middle English Prose "Brut"...
- his tricherie, the
trewest on erthe-- Hit was
Ennias the
athel and
highe kynde, That
sithen depreced provinces and
patrounes bicome Welneghe of al the...
-
mover of
Aristotelian philosophy creating the “Great
Chain of Love”, the
kyndely enclyning, or
natural inclination, that
holds the
universe together in...